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OpenAI’s Pentagon Deal Continues to Face Scrutiny

OpenAI is facing increasing scrutiny after signing an agreement with the Department of Defense to supply its technology across the military’s classified networks. 

On Saturday, OpenAI robotics team lead Caitlin Kalinowski resigned, citing concerns around the deal which she described as “rushed without guardrails defined.” Her criticism of the OpenAI deal cuts to the heart of a dispute about whether OpenAI’s agreement to deploy its models in classified military networks contains the meaningful protections against mass surveillance and autonomous weapons the company claims. 

OpenAI announced the deal with the Pentagon just hours after Anthropic’s refusal to remove restrictions on government usage of fully autonomous weapons and mass surveillance from its own contract. In an unprecedented move against a domestic company, the Trump administration declared Anthropic a national security supply chain risk—banning its use across the federal government while preventing the military from working with any company that conducts “commercial activity” with Anthropic. Hours later, OpenAI announced its own deal to deploy OpenAI models in the U.S. government’s classified networks. 

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman implied that he had found a way to retain the same red lines as Anthropic while still delivering capabilities the U.S. government sought. “Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems,” he wrote. “The [Department of Defense] agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.”

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